Aaron Harber

In addition to this program, Harber has also hosted several other public affairs programs, including The Senate in Balance, Denver 2008: The 2008 Denver Democratic National Convention Series, The Energy Roundtable, the Truth in Political Advertising Project, and the Colorado Election 2010 election series.

[2] Harber's first stint in broadcasting was in 1992 as the host of The WatchDog, a political issues, consumer affairs, and citizens' rights program on the Talk of the Rockies Network.

[8] In 1997, the talk industry's leading publication Talkers Magazine selected Harber out of 5,000 hosts across the country as one of America's "100 Most Important Talk Show Hosts" (along with others such as Don Imus, G. Gordon Liddy, Rush Limbaugh, Dr. Laura Schlesinger, Howard Stern, and Bruce Williams).

[4] Harber was a host on Colorado Decides 2004 when it became a joint venture of KCNC-TV (CBS4), KBDI-TV Channel 12, and the Rocky Mountain News.

Harber has served as a parliamentarian and secretary of numerous political assemblies and conventions, at the county, congressional, and state level.

[19] A decade later, in 1993, he won a case against another government entity (NCWCD, the Northern Colorado Water Conservatory District) which had tried to use the law and the cost of litigation to hide important public information.

He has broadcast his show live from places as disparate as the Democratic Leadership Council, the White House Press Room, and the conservative Heritage Foundation.

He then graduated from Princeton University with an AB, and received a special certificate from The Woodrow Wilson School of Public & International Affairs, where he concentrated in Economics.

[19] Throughout his career, Harber has been involved in numerous businesses ranging from survey research and high technology (where he organized software companies) to venture capital, talk radio, and movie and television production.

[20] Harber's community involvement has included fundraising for the University of Colorado, serving as the first president and chairman of the Nancy Spanier Dance Theatre of Colorado, working as a Volunteer Probation Counselor for the City and County Courts of Denver, and serving on the board of directors of the Boulder Philharmonic Orchestra.

He has worked as a volunteer for ECO-CYCLE and as a Relief House Parent for Attention Homes, an alternative to jail for young offenders.

[19] During the time he was registered as an Investment Adviser with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Harber extensively donated his financial and tax advisory services to men and women starting businesses as well as to charitable organizations on a pro bono basis.

[10] Harber pioneered the vision for the Golden Run community in Erie, Colorado (a zero net energy, zero net waste, environmentally sustainable, climate change-sensitive standalone community) as an example of a modified New Urbanism development imaginatively designed to create a walkable, economically sustainable, environmentally friendly multi-generational neighborhood.

Golden Run's design focuses on the needs of mature adults, senior citizens in their later years, young families, the disabled, and people requiring special care levels.

The concept is to create a community where people can live, work, play, recreate, shop, and enjoy life together, all in an ecologically sound manner.